The
Bracketology field is based on how the tourney looks "as of this moment."
The field below is not based on who I think deserves to be in, but a
prediction of what the committee would do as things stand. For the next few
weeks,
I'll be posting Bracketology updates every Tuesday & Friday. In late February, I release Bracketology updates daily as the season
enters crunch time.

So, how did the first half between New Mexico and UNLV turn out? More than a valid question given the four-overtime contest between TCU and Utah (womens) that spanned the entire first half of Wednesday's game of the night. The Lobos went into the locker room with a 40-28 lead thanks to shooting 15-for-29 from the field and outrebounding the Rebels 23-12. On the verge of turning into a one-sided affair with the lead getting up to as many as eighteen points (61-43), the game actually saved its best drama for when the nation was tuned in.

While "Snowpocalypse" may have cut down on the number of fans able to get down to the Verizon Center it did nothing to the offensive execution of the Georgetown Hoyas. John Thompson III's team did whatever they wanted in the first half, shooting 55.6% from the field (including 8-13 behind the arc) in taking a 50-31 halftime lead. The star of the half: Jason Clark, who scored seventeen points (4-4 3PT) fourteen minutes of action. Austin Freeman added twelve and Villanova played the role of willing prey by turning the ball over sixteen times.

College basketball is in full momentum mode now with dozens of games each week that have major implications on the NCAA Tournament. All of the games below matter in a big way.

Florida vs Mississippi St - 1:30
-- In most bracketology projections, Florida has been left out of the field in recent weeks while MSU has been in. That could all change this weekend as the Gators host an MSU team that has lost 3 of 4. Its conceivable that only 1 of these two teams make the dance, and that this game is a strong deciding factor.

CollegeHoops.net's Preseason
High-Major All-America Team is led by Tulsa big man Jerome Jordan, a
potential First Round NBA pick. Jordan, along with the likes of Luke Babbitt and
Chris Wright, is part of an impressive forward crop in this year's High-Majors.
BYU, Illinois State, Memphis, Nevada, and Tulsa are the only schools with
multiple players on the list.